Strategic niche management in transition pathways: Telework advocacy as groundwork for an incremental transformation

2020 ◽  
Vol 34 ◽  
pp. 139-150 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jonathan Stiles
2020 ◽  
pp. 102697
Author(s):  
André Paul Neto-Bradley ◽  
Rishika Rangarajan ◽  
Ruchi Choudhary ◽  
Amir Bazaz

2021 ◽  
Vol 120 (3) ◽  
pp. 97a
Author(s):  
Emmi Pohjolainen ◽  
Andrea C. Vaiana ◽  
Maxim Igaev ◽  
Helmut Grubmuller

2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (6) ◽  
pp. 3323
Author(s):  
Nishtman Karimi ◽  
Hossein Azadi ◽  
Kobe Boussauw

Continuously changing conditions of sociotechnical systems are the basis of structural changes in communities. Relationships between transition contexts and regime transformation processes and their driving factors in sociotechnical regimes are poorly understood. Moreover, not all changes in multilevel governance regimes are geared towards sustainability, as demonstrated by the case of the water management regime in Sanandaj county in the west of Iran between 1962 and 2018. The current study shows how the management regime of water resources in the case study has changed over time and identifies the institutional arrangements through a retrospective analysis. The analysis is based on three stages of data collection which included a discussion group, a Delphi survey, and a focus group survey among various types of stakeholders. The “Hybrid Transitions” framework is introduced in order to denote processes of regime change that take place in a range of different transition contexts. The findings do not identify a single transition pathway but show that a number of parallel transition pathways have occurred in the context of groundwater and surface water management and their respective institutional arrangements. The study provides a better understanding of the complexity of transition pathways that were devised at the management regime level.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Muflih A. Adnan ◽  
Mohd Adnan Khan ◽  
Pulickel M. Ajayan ◽  
Muhammad M. Rahman ◽  
Jinguang Hu ◽  
...  

The race to decarbonize our energy systems has led to significant advancement in technologies for harvesting renewable energy, carbon capture and conversion. Futures scenarios are being envisioned where CO2 is...


2019 ◽  
Vol 156 ◽  
pp. 272-286 ◽  
Author(s):  
James Scott Vandeventer ◽  
Claudio Cattaneo ◽  
Christos Zografos

eLife ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sofya A Kasatskaya ◽  
Kristin Ladell ◽  
Evgeniy S Egorov ◽  
Kelly L Miners ◽  
Alexey N Davydov ◽  
...  

The organizational integrity of the adaptive immune system is determined by functionally discrete subsets of CD4+ T cells, but it has remained unclear to what extent lineage choice is influenced by clonotypically expressed T-cell receptors (TCRs). To address this issue, we used a high-throughput approach to profile the αβ TCR repertoires of human naive and effector/memory CD4+ T-cell subsets, irrespective of antigen specificity. Highly conserved physicochemical and recombinatorial features were encoded on a subset-specific basis in the effector/memory compartment. Clonal tracking further identified forbidden and permitted transition pathways, mapping effector/memory subsets related by interconversion or ontogeny. Public sequences were largely confined to particular effector/memory subsets, including regulatory T cells (Tregs), which also displayed hardwired repertoire features in the naive compartment. Accordingly, these cumulative repertoire portraits establish a link between clonotype fate decisions in the complex world of CD4+ T cells and the intrinsic properties of somatically rearranged TCRs.


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